Discourage passing secrets as commandline arguments.
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa(a)redhat.com>
---
docs/formatsecret.html.in | 88 +++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------
1 file changed, 57 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-)
diff --git a/docs/formatsecret.html.in b/docs/formatsecret.html.in
index 8f5383cf64..6c2d5e02a6 100644
--- a/docs/formatsecret.html.in
+++ b/docs/formatsecret.html.in
@@ -76,13 +76,13 @@
<pre>
# virsh secret-define volume-secret.xml
Secret 0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccc2f80d6f created
-#
-# MYSECRET=`printf %s "open sesame" | base64`
-# virsh secret-set-value 0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccc2f80d6f $MYSECRET
-Secret value set
-#
</pre>
+ <p>
+ See <a href="#settingSecrets">virsh secret-set-value</a> on
how
+ to set the value of the secret.
+ </p>
+
<p>
The volume type secret can be supplied either in volume XML during
creation of a <a href="formatstorage.html#StorageVol">storage
volume</a>
@@ -103,12 +103,11 @@ Secret value set
# virsh secret-define luks-secret.xml
Secret f52a81b2-424e-490c-823d-6bd4235bc57 created
-#
-# MYSECRET=`printf %s "letmein" | base64`
-# virsh secret-set-value f52a81b2-424e-490c-823d-6bd4235bc57 $MYSECRET
-Secret value set
-#
</pre>
+ <p>
+ See <a href="#settingSecrets">virsh secret-set-value</a> on
how
+ to set the value of the secret.
+ </p>
<p>
The volume type secret can be supplied in domain XML for a luks storage
@@ -156,13 +155,11 @@ Secret 1b40a534-8301-45d5-b1aa-11894ebb1735 created
UUID Usage
-----------------------------------------------------------
1b40a534-8301-45d5-b1aa-11894ebb1735 cephx ceph_example
-#
-# CEPHPHRASE=`printf %s "pass phrase" | base64`
-# virsh secret-set-value 1b40a534-8301-45d5-b1aa-11894ebb1735 $CEPHPHRASE
-Secret value set
-
-#
</pre>
+ <p>
+ See <a href="#settingSecrets">virsh secret-set-value</a> on
how
+ to set the value of the secret.
+ </p>
<p>
The ceph secret can then be used by UUID or by the
@@ -229,7 +226,9 @@ incominguser myname mysecret
<p>
Next, use <code>virsh secret-define iscsi-secret.xml</code> to define
- the secret and <code>virsh secret-set-value</code> using the generated
+ the secret and
+ <code><a href="#settingSecrets">virsh
secret-set-value</a></code>
+ using the generated
UUID value and a base64 generated secret value in order to define the
chosen secret pass phrase. The pass phrase must match the password
used in the iSCSI authentication configuration file.
@@ -243,12 +242,13 @@ Secret c4dbe20b-b1a3-4ac1-b6e6-2ac97852ebb6 created
-----------------------------------------------------------
c4dbe20b-b1a3-4ac1-b6e6-2ac97852ebb6 iscsi libvirtiscsi
-# MYSECRET=`printf %s "mysecret" | base64`
-# virsh secret-set-value c4dbe20b-b1a3-4ac1-b6e6-2ac97852ebb6 $MYSECRET
-Secret value set
-#
</pre>
+ <p>
+ See <a href="#settingSecrets">virsh secret-set-value</a> on
how
+ to set the value of the secret.
+ </p>
+
<p>
The iSCSI secret can then be used by UUID or by the
usage name via the <code><auth></code> element in a
domain's
@@ -313,19 +313,13 @@ Secret 718c71bd-67b5-4a2b-87ec-a24e8ca200dc created
Once the secret is defined, a secret value will need to be set. The
secret would be the passphrase used to access the TLS credentials.
The following is a simple example of using
- <code>virsh secret-set-value</code> to set the secret value. The
+ <code><a href="#settingSecrets">virsh
secret-set-value</a></code> to set
+ the secret value. The
<a href="html/libvirt-libvirt-secret.html#virSecretSetValue">
<code>virSecretSetValue</code></a> API may also be used to set
a more secure secret without using printable/readable characters.
</p>
- <pre>
-# MYSECRET=`printf %s "letmein" | base64`
-# virsh secret-set-value 718c71bd-67b5-4a2b-87ec-a24e8ca200dc $MYSECRET
-Secret value set
-
- </pre>
-
<h3><a id="vTPMUsageType">Usage type
"vtpm"</a></h3>
<p>
@@ -370,17 +364,49 @@ Secret 6dd3e4a5-1d76-44ce-961f-f119f5aad935 created
Once the secret is defined, a secret value will need to be set. The
secret would be the passphrase used to decrypt the vTPM state.
The following is a simple example of using
- <code>virsh secret-set-value</code> to set the secret value. The
+ <code><a href="#settingSecrets">virsh
secret-set-value</a></code>
+ to set the secret value. The
<a href="html/libvirt-libvirt-secret.html#virSecretSetValue">
<code>virSecretSetValue</code></a> API may also be used to set
a more secure secret without using printable/readable characters.
</p>
+ <h2><a id="settingSecrets">Setting secret values in
virsh</a></h2>
+
+ <p>
+ To set the value of the secret you can use the following virsh commands.
+ If the secret is a password-like string (printable characters, no newline)
+ you can use:
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+# virsh secret-set-value --interactive 6dd3e4a5-1d76-44ce-961f-f119f5aad935
+Enter new value for secret:
+Secret value set
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>
+ Another secure option is to read the secret from a file. This way the
+ secret can contain any bytes (even NUL and non-printable characters). The
+ length of the secret is the length of the input file. Alternatively the
+ <code>--plain</code> option can be omitted if the file contents are
+ base64-encoded.
+ </p>
+
+ <pre>
+# virsh secret-set-value 6dd3e4a5-1d76-44ce-961f-f119f5aad935 --file --plain
secretinfile
+Secret value set
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>
+ The secret can also be set via an argument, but note that other users
+ may see it in the process listing output. The secret must be base64
+ encoded.
+ </p>
+
<pre>
# MYSECRET=`printf %s "open sesame" | base64`
# virsh secret-set-value 6dd3e4a5-1d76-44ce-961f-f119f5aad935 $MYSECRET
Secret value set
-
</pre>
</body>
--
2.24.1